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Five Money Secrets Of The Happiest Retirees

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Securing retirement happiness often requires fighting against financial tunnel vision. Having enough in the bank is the starting point, not the finish line. That said, you can’t win the race without starting it. Money doesn’t generate automatic happiness, but living your best life without it often proves challenging. Learning the Five Money Secrets Of The Happiest Retirees can be enormously helpful.

Habit #1: The Happiest Retirees Have A Minimum Of $700,000 In Liquid Retirement Savings

Based upon a nationwide survey of roughly 1,350 retirees researched in writing You Can Retire Sooner Than You Think and What the Happiest Retirees Know, the research (adjusted for inflation) found that the happiest retirees have a minimum of $700,000 in liquid retirement savings, with a few caveats. First, liquid retirement savings must be easily accessible: stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and cash. You don’t need a Scrooge McDuck-styled room of gold coins, but an obscure Pablo Picasso bird-shaped ceramic vase that can’t be sold without 10 years of legal certification doesn’t count.

It should also be noted that $700,000 is a “median” calculation, meaning the number that falls in the middle of the list. Looking at the “average” amount, the happiest retirees have $1.25 million (mean) in liquid retirement savings. But the median can often be more illuminating as a data point and is emphasized here.

When You Can Retire Sooner Than You Think was published in 2014, $500,000 in liquid savings was the critical inflection point for a happy retirement. The world has changed, with massive inflation being the most glaring development. From 2013 to 2020, inflation was a manageable 12%. Then came the COVID pandemic and its subsequent adjustments and consequences, leading inflation to nearly 20% from 2020 to 2023. These new figures incorporate inflation plus a safety buffer: a total of 40%.

Of course, there are happy retirees with less than $700,000, but the research shows significant improvements in happiness levels from $0 to $700,000. Having more is fine, but happiness tends to level off after $700,000 due to the Plateau Effect.

Individual economic needs vary. Some claim $700,000 is exceptionally high, while others find it too low. If that sounds insurmountable, don’t panic. It requires considerable time and hard work to accumulate that kind of wealth, but it is by no means impossible.

Habit #2: Get The Mortgage Paid Or Have Payoff Within Sight

According to research from my 2021 book, What The Happiest Retirees Know, retirees within five years of mortgage payoff are four times more likely to be happy. As the years to pay off the mortgage tick down, happiness levels go up. This revelation was surprising, but surveying over 1,350 families left little doubt.

Mortgage payments are typically the most significant, scariest expenditures. A home loan represents the basic human need for shelter, without which residents are thrown to the wolves. In my neighborhood, it’s more like being thrown to the golden retrievers, but you get the point.

Despite its gravity, the mortgage can be a discouraging, repetitive payment. The weighty output is not for travel, school, or enjoyment but rather a giant subtraction without any immediate satisfaction. Conversely, having no mortgage responsibility is a massive relief on so many levels. Your home is yours, free and clear, and that hefty monthly debit can go toward fun, family, and living life to the fullest.

The counterargument often insists you can make more money holding on to the mortgage and investing your savings. It relies on the premise that the interest paid on the mortgage will equal less than the interest and returns earned in the market—a point of view worth discussing when mortgage rates were sub-3% but more dubious at the current rate of nearly 7%.

How should you decide? The One-Third Rule is typically a valuable rule of thumb. If you can pay off the mortgage using no more than one-third of your non-retirement savings, consider doing so. For example, if you have $150,000 in non-retirement savings and only owe $40,000 on the mortgage, you might consider paying it off.

I’ve learned from the happiest retirees that serenity comes from owning your home outright. It also dramatically lowers monthly retirement living expenses, taking pressure off the nest egg and other monthly income sources. For these reasons, the pros of paying off the mortgage seem to outweigh the cons.

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